SOCHI/MOSCOW (Reuters)
Russia landed two nuclear-capable bombers in South Africa on
a training mission on Wednesday, a flight apparently timed to coincide with
President Vladimir Putin’s opening of a flagship Russia-Africa summit designed
to increase Russian influence.
The two Tupolev Tu-160
strategic bombers touched down at Waterkloof air force base in Tshwane on
Wednesday, the South African National Defence Force said. Russia’s Ministry of
Defence has said the mission is designed to nurture military ties with South
Africa.
Speaking
before dozens of African heads of state at a two-day summit in the southern
Russian city of Sochi, Putin called for trade with African countries to double
over the next four to five years and said Moscow had written off African debts
to the tune of over $20 billion.
The first
Russia-Africa summit is part of a Kremlin drive to win business and restore
influence that faded after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, which backed
leftist governments and movements across the continent throughout the Cold War.
“Many
Russian companies have long and successfully worked with partners from the most
different sectors of the African economy and plan to expand their influence in
Africa. We of course will provide support at the state level,” said Putin.
The prize is
greater political clout on a continent with 54 United Nations member states,
vast mineral wealth and potentially lucrative markets for Russian-manufactured
weapons.
But Russia
is starting from a low base. Although it has enjoyed considerable success
selling arms to African countries, Moscow lags far behind competitors in trade
terms.
Russia says
its trade with African countries rose to $20 billion last year, but it did not
rank among the continent’s top five largest partners for trade in goods,
according to Eurostat.
That list
was topped by the European Union, followed by China, India, the United States
and the United Arab Emirates.
As it noted
the arrival of Russia’s warplanes, the South African National Defence Force
praised what it said were strong diplomatic links between the countries.
“Our relations are not solely built on
‘struggle politics’, but rather on fostering mutually beneficial partnerships
based on common interests,” it said in a statement.
South African
media have been more skeptical about Moscow’s return to the continent. “Russia
is the clumsy latecomer at Africa’s superpower party,” ran a Mail &
Guardian headline in June.
Russia’s
reappearance was thrust into the spotlight last year when three Russian
journalists were killed in the Central African Republic (CAR) while
investigating the alleged presence there of a shady Russian private military
contractor known as the Wagner group.
Putin and
CAR President Faustin-Archange Touadéra discussed the investigation into the
killings at talks on Wednesday, the Kremlin said.
U.S.
officials have vowed to counter what they see as Moscow’s growing political and
economic clout in Africa as well as that of China, which has long had a large
economic presence there and began its own series of Africa summits in 2006.
Russia and
Niger signed a deal to supply 12 Russian-made Mi-35 attack helicopters to
Niger, RIA news agency cited a senior official at Russia’s federal
military-technical cooperation service as saying on Wednesday.
On Monday,
Putin accused former colonial powers in the West of intimidating African
countries to exploit the continent’s resources. “We see how an array of Western
countries are resorting to pressure, intimidation and blackmail of sovereign
African governments,” Putin told TASS news agency.
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